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60A - ENA THRIVE SANTA ANA
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09/17/2019
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60A - ENA THRIVE SANTA ANA
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9/12/2019 6:08:43 PM
Creation date
9/12/2019 5:57:59 PM
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City Clerk
Doc Type
Agenda Packet
Agency
Community Development
Item #
60A
Date
9/17/2019
Destruction Year
2024
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EXHIBIT 3 <br />COMMUNITY BENEFITS <br />The community land trust (CLT) model is based on the principle that land is a vital public asset, <br />to be used for public benefit. This section breaks down the community benefits of the project <br />proposed at the Walnut and Daisy Property: how the project will meet the needs outlined in the <br />previous section and increase local income, bringing cost savings for both residents and the <br />City, contributing to community wealth, health and wellbeing in the Casa'Bonita neighborhood. <br />Participation, Health, and Sustainability <br />THRIVE understands, as do many health and planning professionals, that physical and mental <br />health, equity and sustainability are all linked. The Walnut and Daisy Micro -Farm will not only <br />make organic produce and other healthy options more available in the neighborhood, but also <br />create a cost savings for the City. <br />THRIVE plans to develop a Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) program at the Walnut and <br />Daisy site -- a CSA is a membership -based model that provides monthly baskets of locally - <br />grown vegetables, fruit and other garden products such as flowers or herbs, to local members at <br />a low cost. THRIVE will advance a cooperative -owned business model that promotes healthy <br />food options, as well as an active local economy. <br />The connection between civic engagement and improved health outcomes is well documented, <br />and would benefit the City as a whole. The Micro -Farm project will follow THRIVE's tradition of <br />community -led development, based on profound resident involvement both in volunteer and <br />paid capacities. Volunteerism, as explained by Laura C. Batista and A. Margarita Cruz-Led6n, <br />is directly connected to improved health in older adults.6 Improved physical and mental health <br />means less City -spending on Police, Fire, and other costly emergency services. Moreover, <br />volunteerism and involvement with community groups are linked to improvements in "physical <br />health, altruism, compliance with the law, education, employment, and child welfare"7 -- all of <br />which represent direct, positive impacts on the local economy and the City as a whole. <br />Cooperative Jobs, Supplementing Household Incomes <br />Community micro -farms provide healthy food options, physical activity, and supplement the <br />economies of producers, workers, and consumers. Compared to large commercial or industrial <br />businesses, income from sales at micro -farms is sometimes small but sufficient to provide <br />6 Laura C. Batista and A. Margarita Cruz-Led6n, "The Relationship between Civic Engagement <br />and Health among Older Adults:' Florida International University, USA. <br />https:Hcore.aG.uk/download/pdf/46946362.pdf <br />7 The Committee on National Statistics Panel on Measuring Social and Civic Engagement and <br />Social Cohesion in Surveys. Quoted in "Civic Health & Public Health," by The National <br />Conference on Citizenship. https://ncoc.org/data-in-action/civic-health-public-health/ <br />60A-51 <br />
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